It’s Champions League quarterfinal week, one day after Real Madrid drew with Atletico Madrid and the day that Paris Saint-Germain lost at home to Barcelona. Europe’s elite clubs are all in action, but the biggest story is in Dortmund, who is not in the competition and languishing in 10th place in the Bundesliga. Jurgen Klopp, its charismatic coach who took over when it was 13th and guided it to two league titles and a run to the 2013 Champions League final, has just announced his resignation.

Two things were different about this announcement: one, Borussia Dortmund president Hans-Joachim Watzke was sitting next to Klopp at the time, and he looked devastated. He did not want Klopp to go. That doesn't happen very often (in fact, not at all). And two, the list of clubs being linked to Klopp were all A-List. They included Real Madrid, Barcelona and PSG, as well as Manchester City, Arsenal and Chelsea.

That does not mean that he will be a guaranteed success at Anfield. But it does mean that Fenway Sports Group has pulled off an almighty coup in luring one of the brightest personalities in the game to a side currently 10th in the table, albeit only three points away from the Champions League places.

Klopp at one of the big boys would not really make sense. He is the upstart who wants to rock the boat.

“Vitality” is the word he used when he described what Dortmund needed after it went bankrupt in 2005 and was looking for a way forward. He was the man to provide it.

“They had to regain vitality,” he said in an interview with El Pais. “And they looked for a coach that was full of life, that played a bright style of football, that had fun, that laughed…”

Liverpool, the side with the fifth-highest budget, looking to break into the top four, is in a similar position. It needs vitality. Not that the budget bothers Klopp. Quite the opposite, in fact.

“If you don’t have money and, despite everything, you want quality, you have to be brave,” he has said.

“Not having money doesn’t mean not being able to carry on working; it just means that you have to find other ways. I’m not interested in who is the best but in who makes the most out of their own possibilities. Everyone knows the best and everyone knows who is best. But how is that interesting?”

That’s why he has wondered how Vicente del Bosque would get on as coach of a club like Osasuna.

Klopp talks like a fan and at a club like Liverpool, which is built into the fabric of the community like no other, that will play into his hands. He is the maverick who likes to upset the hierarchy. In his penultimate season at Dortmund, after a loss to Borussia Monchengladbach and the eighth red card of his career, he had a row with Bayern sporting director Matthias Sammer.

“If I were him, I'd thank God that someone had the idea of hiring me every time I walk into the Bayern training ground," Klopp said, in response to Sammer’s suggestion that Bayern’s rivals lag behind because of their attitude to training.

"Klopp’s comment that Sammer does not contribute anything to Bayern was disrespectful and shameless,” wrote Oliver Kahn in his Bild column.

“Jurgen is an emotional coach,” Dortmund’s Kevin Grosskreutz (who until recently slept in a bedroom bedecked in Dortmund club colours) responded. “His style suits Dortmund. I don’t believe in trying to change people. He is how he is.”

Football and emotion go hand in hand at Liverpool, even if there may not be many players sleeping under club-branded duvets.

Best soccer tifos from around the world

Galatasaray fans display a sensational "Rocky" tifo ahead of their clash against rival Fenerbahce. It didn't inspire a victory, though. The Turkish rivals played to a 0-0 draw.

Emrah Yorulmaz/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Borussia Dortmund fans channel their 1963 cup triumph over Benfica ahead of the teams' second leg in the Champions League round of 16 at Signal Iduna Park.

Alexandre Simoes/Getty Images

Hapoel Be'er Sheva fans turn to Moses for tifo inspiration, with his splitting the Red Sea illustrating how "impossible is nothing" in their Europa League series against Besiktas.

Jack Guez

Fans of Tunisia's Club Africain display this pointed tifo at a friendly against PSG, whose Qatari owners have pumped millions and millions into the club.

Fethi Belaid/Getty Images

U.S. fans in Columbus, Ohio, make a "One Nation, One Team" statement ahead of the USMNT's World Cup qualifying match against Mexico on November 11, 2016.

Icon Sportswire/Getty Images

Germany fans display their heart for the team colors ahead of a World Cup qualifier against Czech Republic in October 2016.

Stuart Franklin/Getty Images

Italy fans spell out their support for the Azzurri ahead of a massive World Cup qualifier vs. Spain in October 2018.

Paolo Bruno/Getty Images

Iceland fans keep up their world-famous passion for the national team during a World Cup qualifier against Turkey in October 2016.

Alexander Scheuber/UEFA/Getty Images

Fans in the United Arab Emirates set their sights on reaching the 2018 World Cup in Russia during a qualifying match vs. Australia in September 2016.

Karim Sahib/Getty Images

Colombia fans send a massive jersey around the stadium during a World Cup qualifier vs. Venezuela in September 2016.

Juan Finol/CON/Getty Images

Seattle Sounders fans turn to Game Of Thrones for inspiration in a game against the Cascadia rival Vancouver Whitecaps in September 2016.

Ted S. Warren/AP

Djurgardens fans go all out in Sweden for a match against AIK in September 2016.

Marcus Ericsson/Ombrello/Getty Images

Zulte Waregem fans prepare Kortrijk for the absolute worst in this Belgian top-flight match in September 2016.

Nico Vereecken/Photonews/Getty Images

Seattle Sounders fans turn their pop culture reference to Poltergeist in March 2016 ahead of the season home opener against Sporting Kansas City.

Ted S. Warren/AP

The Timbers Army doubles down on their Eastbound and Down theme, adding another wrinkle during the club's MLS Western Conference final first leg vs. FC Dallas on November 22, 2015 at Providence Park.

Steve Dykes/Getty Images

Fans make a French flag tifo at Wembley Stadium during the singing of Le Marseillaise ahead of England's friendly vs. France, which took place days after the terrorist attacks in Paris.

Kirsty Wigglesworth/AP

The Timbers Army referenced Eastbound & Down's Kenny Powers with their "Cup Bound and Down" tifo for the Portland Timbers' MLS playoff elimination game against Sporting Kansas City on October 29, 2015.

Brondby IF fans display a gladiator holding up a lion's head during the team's Danish Alka Superliga match against FC Copenhagen, whose logo is a lion's head, on September 27, 2015.

Lars Ronbog/FrontZoneSport via Getty Images

New England Revolution fans equate Jermaine Jones to Indiana Jones on their quest to capture the 2015 MLS Cup on September 26, 2015.

Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire

New England Revolution fans display a Lion King theme in honor of Orlando City FC's first visit to Gillette Stadium on September 5, 2015.

Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire

Red Bulls fans take a shot at NYCFC's two summer arrivals, 37-year-old Frank Lampard and 36-year-old Andrea Pirlo, ahead of their third MLS meeting of 2015.

Cal Sport Media/AP

Germany fans in Cologne salute their World Cup champions ahead of a friendly against the United States in June, 2015.

Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts/Getty Images

Real Madrid fans went all out prior to the second leg of the 2014-15 Champions League semifinal vs. Juventus.

Angel Martinez/Real Madrid/Getty Images

Lazio fans display a stunning eagle tifo ahead of the Rome derby against AS Roma in their penultimate Serie A match of the 2014-15 season.

Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images

Barcelona fans bid farewell to veteran midfielder Xavi with this banner at his last league game at Camp Nou before he departs for Qatari club Al Sadd.

Manu Fernandez/AP

Fans at Anfield pay tribute to Steven Gerrard in his final home match as a Liverpool player in May 2015.

Oli Scarff/AFP/Getty Images

Juventus fans state their case to beat Real Madrid in the 2014-15 Champions League semifinals and reach the final in Berlin.

Michael Regan/Getty Images

Fans at Benfica's Estadio da Luz remind rival Porto who the Primeira Liga reigning champion is during an April 2015 match in Portugal.

Carlos Rodrigues/Getty Images

New York Red Bulls fans send a pointed message to their NYCFC counterparts prior to the teams' first MLS meeting in May, 2015.

Bayern Munich fans implore their club to (translated) "Never give up" in the Champions League quarterfinal second leg vs. Porto. Bayern then turned a 3-1 first-leg deficit into a 7-4 aggregate win and a place in the semifinals.

A. Beier/FC Bayern Munich/Getty Images

Dortmund fans commemorate their 1997 Champions League trophy in the club's clash vs. Juventus–the opponent on the wrong side of that title bout.

Patrik Stollarz/AFP/Getty Images

Portland Timbers fans speak out against homophobia with this tifo in a 2013 match against Chivas USA

Don Ryan/AP

Atletico's supporters display a banner reading "Atleti crushes" before the Spanish league match between Atletico Madrid and FC Barcelona at the Vicente Calderon stadium in Madrid,

Gerard Julien/AFP/Getty Image

Borussia Dortmund fans put on a remarkable display ahead of a UEFA Champions League quarterfinal second leg match.

Odd Andersen/AFP/Getty Images

Brondby IF fans unveil a tifo ahead of a match in Denmark against Randers FC.

Lars Ronbog/FrontZoneSport via Getty Images

FC Barcelona fans display a huge banner in memory of former head coach Tito Vilanova.

David Ramos/Getty Images

Galatasaray fans support their team during the UEFA Champions League Group D match between Borussia Dortmund and Galatasaray at the Turk Telekom Arena in Istanbul.

Burak Akbulut/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

The American Outlaws unveil a huge tifo ahead of a 2014 World Cup send-off match between the USA and Turkey at Red Bull Arena in Harrison, N.J.

Tony Quinn/Icon SMI

Marseille's supporters use paper sheets to create an "OM" (Olympique de Marseille) tifo at the beginning of the French L1 football match between Marseille and Genoble.

Patrick Valasseris/AFP/Getty Images

Seattle Sounders fans display their tifo that shows coach Sigi Schmid playing cards and holding a Royal Flush before a match against the Portland Timbers.

Ted S. Warren/AP

Panathinaikos Athens fans display a banner during the UEFA Europa League match against Dynamo Moscow.

Louisa Gouliamaki/AFP/Getty Images

Fans of the Saudi Al-Hilal team celebrate after the scoring of a goal against Uzbekistan's Bunyodkor.

Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images

Seattle Sounders fans unveil a tifo inspired from the “Build a Bonfire” chant, featuring Sounder players holding torches on horseback ahead of a game against the Portland Timbers.

Ted S. Warren/AP

Fans of Hertha BSC before the Bundesliga match between Hertha BSC and Werder Bremen in Berlin.

Sevilla's fans deploy a giant banner in the stands before the UEFA Europa league final match between Benfica and Sevilla.

Filippo Monteforte/AFP/Getty Images

Fans in Liverpool’s Kop End at Anfield commemorate those lost in the Hillsborough disaster.

Andrew Powell/Liverpool FC via Getty Images

Lyon fans during a game against Saint Etienne.

Eddy Lemastre/DPPI/Icon SMI

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​FSG thinks that Klopp can break into the top four this season with the current squad. It’s true that with Chelsea struggling and Manchester United looking beatable, the race for Champions League places is an open one. On the other hand, Liverpool’s players have been bought to play the possession-based football that Brendan Rodgers wanted. Klopp’s teams are used to less possession, cover more ground, and make more tackles and interceptions.

“The creation of goalscoring opportunities [at Dortmund]… was the logical, mathematically calculated consequence of relentless, frenetic work,” explained Raphael Honigstein in Das Reboot, his excellent book analyzing how Germany won the World Cup.

Klopp put it another way: “Gegenpressing is the best playmaker in the world.”

Klopp has come up against Arsene Wenger, Jose Mourinho and Manuel Pellegrini (while he was at Malaga) in the Champions League and beaten them all. His win over Mourinho, when Dortmund beat Real Madrid 4-1 in the Champions League semifinal first leg, marked the apotheosis of gegenpressing. In Germany, they call Mourinho ‘the German Klopp’ rather than the other way around.

Liverpool fans might wonder just how great Philippe Coutinho can become under Klopp, or how the coach might revitalize the likes of Emre Can, Mamadou Sakho and Roberto Firmino. In a way, the specifics of those decisions matter little. The beauty of appointing Klopp is just that; it’s recognition from a top coach that this club is still important. Roy Hodgson and Rodgers were grateful to Liverpool for the opportunity. This time, Liverpool is grateful to Klopp.

This is the best decision that FSG has made in five years of ownership. It will allow fans to dream big again, and in Liverpool that’s what football is all about. Klopp is vitality, and Liverpool already loves him.